Process for foaming flame retardant polystyrene and polystyrene shaped articles

ABSTRACT

Polystyrene melts treated with flameproofing agents and nucleating agents are foamed by addition of alkanes, such as propane, butane or propane/butane mixtures, as blowing agents, such that the flame retardant properties of the polystyrene foams are achieved after a very short storage time, or at the latest after storage for three weeks at room temperature. Even after a storage time of one week, sufficient blowing agent is still present in the closed-cell pores of the polystyrene foams to be able to undertake adequate post-expansion of the foams with a foaming factor of 1.8 to 2.0.

This application is a divisional of application Ser. No. 08/243,824filed May 17, 1994.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to a process for foaming polystyrene,which has been given a flame retardant treatment, by addition of blowingagents, and to a shaped article of extruded polystyrene foam.

Combustible gases are in general employed as blowing agents for foamingin the field of building materials which have been given a flameretardant treatment, such as sheets of plastic, expanded films, thermalinsulation film webs and the like. These materials are produced byextrusion from foamed melts of plastic. The combustibility of theseblowing agents or blowing gases is in conflict with the requirement forflameproofing, so that such building materials develop their full flameretardant properties only after a relatively long storage period, duringwhich the blowing gas can escape from the cells of the foamed plastic.

German Utility Model No. 92 11 584 discloses a shaped article ofpolystyrene recycled material which is obtained by melting scrappolystyrene foam to form polystyrene, in order to allow the air enclosedto escape, and then converting the melt into expanded polystyrene, afteraddition of blowing agent. Pentane is used as the blowing agent, withthe foaming operation taking place in the head of an extruder. The knownshaped article is produced in the form of so-called continuous sheets,which are cut into the desired lengths and widths and then furtherprocessed as building material sheets. The known shaped article containsa flameproofing additive, which renders it "flame retardant" accordingto building materials class B1 in accordance with DIN 4102. The knownshaped article of polystyrene recycled material is used as an insulatingmaterial for the building industry and meets the requirements of DIN 18164 Part 1.

To prepare the polystyrene foam as the starting material for the knownshaped article, the melt of scrap polystyrene is cooled to a temperaturebelow the melting temperature and pressed into the shape of filaments,and the cooled filaments are comminuted into pieces. These componentpieces are melted in another extruder, pentane is added as the blowinggas, which is forced in under a high pressure, and the melt is thenextruded as a flexible foam via a slot die at temperatures below 150°C., where it is shaped by calibration. The storage time required beforethe full flame retardant properties of these building materials areachieved is not referred to.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

It is an object of the present invention to provide an improved processfor the production of polystyrene foam which has been given a flameretardant treatment. It is a particular object of the invention toprovide a process in which, in spite of the use of combustible gases asblowing agents, the storage time required by the resulting buildingmaterials is shortened before their full flame retardant properties areachieved.

A further object of the invention resides in the provision of animproved polystyrene shaped article.

In accomplishing the foregoing objects, there has been provided inaccordance with one aspect of the present invention a process forproducing a foamed polymer article having flame retardant properties,comprising the steps of adding a blowing agent comprising propane,butane or a mixture of propane and butane to a styrene polymer melt; andsubjecting the polymer melt to extrusion conditions sufficient toproduce an extruded foamed polymer article. In a preferred embodiment,the process further comprises the steps of permitting the foamed articleto rest for a period of at least about one week sufficient to adjust thecontent of blowing agent to at least a minimum amount required forfurther expansion of the foamed article by heat treatment, and thensubjecting the article to further expansion under an elevatedtemperature to produce an increase in thickness in the article by afactor of from about 1.8 to 2.

In accordance with another aspect of the invention, there has beenprovided a shaped article of extruded styrene polymer foam into which ablowing agent gas is injected and which contains flameproofing agent,wherein the shaped article has a thickness of from about 1 to 10 mm, awidth of from about 50 to 320 cm, a foam density of from about 30 to 70g/l and a blowing agent content of up to about 3% by weight.

Further objects, features and advantages of the present invention willbecome apparent from the detailed description of preferred embodimentsthat follows, when considered together with the accompanying figures ofdrawing.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The invention is described below in more detail with reference to thedrawings. In the drawings:

FIG. 1 is a graph showing the flameproofing properties of polystyreneshaped articles and the gas evolution of blowing agent as a function ofthe storage time for various compositions and percentages by weight ofthe blowing agent;

FIG. 2 is a graph showing the mineral content in % by weight in thepolystyrene foam as a function of the talc content percentage in thetalc/chalk mixture;

FIG. 3 is a graph showing the foaming factor of the polystyrene shapedarticle stored for one week as a function of the thermal after-treatmenttime, and the blowing gas content in % by weight; and

FIG. 4 is a chart showing the emission index of propane, butane andmixtures thereof from polystyrene foam which has a certain foam density.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

According to the invention, a process is provided in which propane,butane or mixtures of propane and butane are added as the blowing agentto the styrene polymer melt. The blowing agent here expedientlycomprises n-butane and/or iso-butane. In one preferred embodiment of theprocess, the constituents of the blowing agent are mixed in a ratio,based on the total volume of the blowing agent, of from about 10 to 100%by volume of propane, from about 0 to 90% by volume of n-butane and/orfrom about 0 to 90% by volume of iso-butane. Preferably, from about 60to 90% by volume of propane are mixed with from about 10 to 40% byvolume of n-butane and/or from about 10 to 40% by volume of iso-butane.

In a further preferred embodiment of the process, the polystyrene meltis melted from a polystyrene copolymer, a copolymer of styrene andbutadiene or polymers of styrene or mixtures thereof.

A polystyrene shaped article which has a thickness of 1 to 10 mm, awidth of from about 50 to 320 cm, a foam density of from about 30 to 70g/l and a blowing agent content after a storage time of three weeks ofup to about 3% by weight is formed from the extruded polystyrene foam.

In a further embodiment of the invention, a polystyrene shaped articlecomprising a closed-cell or closed-pore expanded film having a thicknessof from about 1 to 5 mm, a width of from about 75 to 320 cm, a foamdensity of from about 60 to 70 g/l and a blowing agent content of fromabout 2.8 to 3% by weight is extruded. The polystyrene shaped articlefurthermore can constitute sheet goods having a thickness of from about2 to 10 mm, a width of from about 50 to 200 cm, a foam density of fromabout 30 to 40 g/l and a blowing agent content after a storage time ofthree weeks of up to about 1.9% by weight.

After a storage time of 1 to 13 weeks, the polystyrene shaped articleaccording to the invention is "normally flammable" to "flame retardant",according to building material classes B2 and B1 in accordance with DIN4102. The blowing gas content with, for example, a propane/butanemixture of 60/40 is then less than 1.9% by weight.

The advantages achieved by the invention are that the storage time ofthe shaped articles produced from polystyrene foam before the full flameretardant properties are achieved is shortened, and that the pores orcells of the shaped article still contain sufficient blowing agent, evenafter a storage time of one week, to bring about foaming by a factor of1.8 to 2.0 by a subsequent heat treatment. It is also advantageous thatthe emission of hydrocarbons can be reduced by appropriate choice of theblowing agent composition.

A polystyrene melt of polystyrene granules, flameproofing agent andnucleating agent is melted in the first extrusion step. Gases areinjected into this melt as the blowing agent under a high pressure of upto about 350 bar at the end of the first extrusion step. The blowingagent is mixed homogeneously with the polystyrene melt, and before asecond extrusion step, the polystyrene melt is homogenized further andcooled to a melt temperature of below about 150° C. before theextrusion. Propane, butane or a mixture of these two alkanes is fed tothe polystyrene melt as the blowing agent. The blowing agent herecomprises n-butane and/or iso-butane. The constituents of the blowingagent are mixed in a ratio, based on the total volume of the blowingagent, of from about 10 to 100% by volume of propane, from about 0 to90% by volume of n-butane and/or from about 0 to 90% by volume ofiso-butane. A ratio of from about 60 to 90% by volume of propane andfrom about 10 to 40% by volume of n-butane and/or from about 10 to 40%by volume of isobutane is particularly preferred. The basic materialsfor the extruded foam are homo-polystyrene and styrene copolymers,including copolymers of styrene and butadiene, styrene/maleic anhydridecopolymers, acrylic/butadiene/styrene copolymers, polyphenylene oxide ormixtures thereof. The polymers are made up predominantly of styrene andare referred to herein as "polystyrene" for simplicity.

The nucleating agents added serve to keep the pore or cell dimensions inthe expanded polystyrene film extruded from the polystyrene melt or thepolystyrene shaped article as uniform as possible. Nucleating agentswhich are added are, above all, chalk and/or talc, in each case chosenas a function of the blowing agent composition. The talc content in thetalc/chalk mixture can be reduced as the propane content in the blowingagent increases, as will be explained later with the aid of the figures.Endothermal nucleating agents which can be used are citric acid andsodium bicarbonate.

Halogenated alkyl-aryl phosphates, ammonium polyphosphates,hexabromocyclododecane and magnesium hydroxide are added to the startingsubstances of the polystyrene melt as preferred flameproofing agents.

The extrudate of polystyrene foam is produced in a tandem extruder line.In a first extrusion step, a mixture of polystyrene granules,flameproofing agent and nucleating agent is processed to a homogeneouslyflowing polystyrene melt in the primary extruder. At the outlet of theprimary extruder, the blowing agent is injected under a high pressureand is mixed intensively with the polystyrene melt. This mixture istransported with the aid of a deflecting device into a secondaryextruder, and is further homogenized therein and cooled to the desiredmelt temperature of below 150° C. This polystyrene melt is then extrudedthrough an annular die with a narrow gap. Foaming in the polystyrenemelt takes place when the polystyrene melt emerges from the annular die.The expanded film bubble extruded from the annular die has a certainblow-up or expansion ratio and is then drawn over a cooling mandrel, cutinto two film webs at the end of the calibration operation and wound upinto reels. The reels are closed-cell or closed-pore expanded filmshaving a thickness of 1 to 5 mm, a width of 50 to 320 cm, a foam densityof 60 to 70 g/l and a blowing agent content of up to about 3% by weight.This blowing agent content arises because, immediately after formationof the polystyrene foam, the fine cells or pores are filled with blowingagent and the partial air pressure in the pores is zero. This blowingagent content of up to 3% by weight is sufficient to enable adequatepost-expansion by a subsequent heat treatment. The specific dimensionsof the expanded film result from the dimensions of the annular die used.Instead of an annular die, a corresponding slot die can also be employedon the secondary extruder in order to obtain sheet goods having athickness of 2 to 10 mm, a width of 50 to 200 cm, a foam density of 30to 40 g/l and a blowing agent content after a storage time of threeweeks of 1.7 to 1.9% by weight.

After extrusion of the expanded film bubble or of the shaped article,the blowing agent diffuses very slowly out of the pores of thepolystyrene foam, and on the other hand a very rapid intrusion of airoccurs, which leads to an increase in the total gas pressure in thecells in accordance with Dalton's law. The optimum gas pressure for asubsequent heat treatment of the expanded film or of the shaped articleis reached within a storage time of some days at room temperature. Forexample, the foam density of sheet goods which are processed to forminsulation sheets can be reduced by a factor of up to 2 with the aid ofsubsequent heat treatment in a so-called post-expansion operation, whichis equivalent to increasing the thermal insulation properties by afactor of 2.

Polystyrene melts which are extruded to form polystyrene foams afterdirect injection of blowing agent, such as n-butane, show a good flameretardant action, i.e., they are "normally flammable" to "flameretardant" according to building material classes B2 and B1 inaccordance with DIN 4102. However, this is achieved only after storageat a room temperature of 22° C. for some months, even though theseproducts have been given a flame retardant treatment, as can be seenfrom FIG. 1. In this figure, the gas evolution of butane, propane andmixtures of these two alkanes is plotted as a function of theconditioning time. The conditioning time is obtained from the root ofthe storage time. The parameter of the curves is the mixing ratio ofpropane to butane, the limit of the group of curves being pure propaneand pure butane as the blowing agent. The foam thickness is 3.2 mm andthe foam density 65 g/l. The content of blowing agent in percent byweight, based on the polystyrene foam, is in the range from 2.6 to 4.3%by weight at the start of the gas evolution and immediately after thesecond extrusion step has ended. After a storage time of thirteen weeks,the weight content of the blowing agent is less than 1.6%. If the topcurve in FIG. 1, which indicates a butane content of 100% in the blowingagent, is taken into consideration, it can be seen that the butaneevolution from the pores of the polystyrene foam takes place veryslowly. As the storage temperature increases, the butane permeabilityincreases greatly in a similar manner to the diffusion coefficient. Thistemperature dependence of the butane permeability can be described by anequation of the Arrhenius type:

    P=P.sub.0 e.sup.-Ep/RT

in which P₀ is a constant, E_(p) is the activation energy of the totalpermeation process, R is the gas constant and T is the temperature. Atemperature exposure of, for example, no more than 60° C. shortens thestorage time considerably, but the resulting energy- andenvironment-related aspects suggest that heat treatment at thesetemperatures is not advisable for economic reasons. These reasonsinclude, inter alia, the high energy expenditure for heating up to 60°C., the severe gas evolution, with the associated additional emission ofhydrocarbons into the environment, and the difficulty of being able tocarry out a reasonable thermal after-treatment to achieve post-expansionof polystyrene shaped articles, since in general the content of blowingagent in the closed cells is then no longer sufficient for thepost-expansion. In FIG. 1, a dividing line (solid line) is drawn between"readily flammable" on the one hand, and "normally flammable" to "flameretardant" polystyrene foams, on the other hand. This dividing line doesnot run horizontally but falls at a slight angle as the conditioningtime increases. The higher the propane content in the blowing agent, thesooner flameproofing according to building material class B2 is achievedat a higher content of blowing agent, in comparison with the othermixtures of propane and butane and pure butane.

The polystyrene foam extruded with 100% butane achieves flameproofingaccording to building material class B2 only after storage for threemonths. If extrusion is carried out with a propane/butane mixture in aweight ratio of 60 to 40, good flame retardant properties are alreadyachieved within three weeks of storage of foamed reel goods orafter-foamed shaped articles or finished products, the storage time ineach case being calculated from the extrusion date.

In spite of the use of combustible blowing agent, the flame retardantproperties of extruded polystyrene foams or polystyrene shaped articlescan be realized considerably faster, without increasing the temperature,by the process according to the invention than in the case ofconventional polystyrene foams which are foamed with other blowinggases. The fact that the foam densities of the polystyrene expandedfilms and the sheet goods remain at about the same order of magnitude isimportant here.

FIG. 2 shows the nucleating properties of the nucleating agents for somepropane and butane mixing ratios. As the content of propane in thepropane/butane blowing agent mixture increases, the nucleating effectincreases, and the talc content must therefore be reduced. Ifregenerated material is additionally added to the starting substances ofthe polystyrene melt, the nucleation is too severe. The talc content inthe talc/chalk mixture is only 0.2 to 0.6 percent here. If chalk or achalk/talc mixture is employed as the nucleating agent instead of talc,the nucleating effect is weakened to the desired extent, so that ahigher and more precise metering with nucleating agent can be employed.

The curves in FIG. 2 show the mineral content in the polystyrene foam inpercent by weight as a function of the percent talc content in thetalc/chalk mixtures. The parameter of these curves is the alkanecomposition of the blowing agent. The top curve has 100% butane as theblowing agent, while the bottom curve has 100% propane as the blowingagent. The two curves in between have a mixing ratio of propane tobutane of 40 to 60 and, respectively, 60 to 40.

In FIG. 3, the foaming factor is plotted against the treatment time inminutes. The foaming factor is defined as the quotient of the foamthickness after and before the heat treatment of polystyrene foams orpolystyrene shaped articles. The foaming factor is in general measuredhere at 130° C. by convective circulation of hot air in a hot air oven.A foaming factor of 1.8 to 2.0 is completely adequate for thepost-expansion operation on conditioned polystyrene foams or shapedarticles, which is equivalent to the thickness dimensions of thesubsequently heat-treated products being increased by this factor of 1.8to 2.0. The post-expansion operation is in general carried out after astorage time of two to seven days. This means that adequate blowingagent for the post-expansion must still be present in the closed-cellpores, which then expands correspondingly by the convective heattreatment at 130° C. over a period of about 2 to 2.4 minutes and thuscauses enlargement of the dimensions and reduction of the foam density.The products are in general stored at an ambient temperature of 22° C.It can be seen from the three curves shown in FIG. 3 that the processingtime increases with a higher propane content in the blowing agent, sincethe relatively flat curve allows a processing time of 0.4 to about 2minutes for a blowing agent of 100% propane, while on the other twocurves, with a lower propane content in the blowing agent, theprocessing time range is less than 1.8 minutes.

FIG. 4 shows the emission index of hydrocarbons during production ofpolystyrene foams having a foam density of 65 g/l with blowing agentadditions of 100% butane, propane/butane mixtures in ratios of 20:80,40:60 and 60:40, and 100% propane. It can be seen from FIG. 4 that thehydrocarbon emission is reduced by using propane and also propane/butanemixtures, compared with addition of 100% butane. In this respect,pollution of the environment due to hydrocarbon emissions is reduced byselection of the appropriate blowing agent additive.

EXAMPLE

Burning tests in accordance with DIN 4102-B2 were carried out withpolystyrene foams produced by the process according to the inventiondescribed above, the extruded foams having a weight per unit area of 200g/m². The foam density was always 65 g/l.

The blowing agents were 100% butane, 20:80 and 60:40 propane/butanemixtures and 100% propane. The weight content of the blowing agent aftera storage time of three weeks to two months was between 2.8 and 1.2%.Flame retardant properties of building material class B2 were obtainedin the case of a storage time of three weeks for a 60:40 propane/butanemixture and for 100% propane as the blowing agent, but not for propanecontents lower than 60% in the blowing agent. These flame retardantproperties were also achieved for a 20:80 propane/butane mixture in thecase of storage for two months.

What is claimed is:
 1. A shaped article of extruded styrene polymer foaminto which a blowing agent gas which comprises propane, butane or amixture thereof is injected and which contains flameproofing agent,wherein the shaped article has a thickness of from about 1 to 10 mm, awidth of from about 50 to 320 cm, a foam density of from about 30 to 70g/l and said blowing agent content of up to about 3% by weight.
 2. Ashaped article as claimed in claim 1, which comprises sheet goods havinga thickness of from about 2 to 10 mm, a width of from about 50 to 200cm, a foam density of from about 30 to 40 g/l and a blowing agentcontent after a storage period of 3 weeks of up to about 1.9% by weight.3. A shaped article as claimed in claim 1, which is "normally flammable"to "flame retardant" according to building material classes B2 and B1 inaccordance with DIN 4102 after a storage time of 1 to 13 weeks.
 4. Ashaped article as claimed in claim 1, wherein the thickness has beenincreased by a factor of about 1.8 to 2 by subsequent heat treatmentwithin one week after formation by extrusion.